The Cedarville Herald, Volume 65, Numbers 27-52

QSlMUimSX HERALD, FRIDAY, DCTOfSKS t, W4* iw^wwanwftniiiw X - ■ m m m s m k T o 'Carrafi. SUmmur, wM* o f O p to fHnrnWi tftdMiPNr wakaown, wilt ink# —ties th*t M Sfcptomh#r ' 14 % IMS, &yd* Rtarner, bar h -baw d. fUai « jMitUksi tor d i- v*-re# in th# Gmrnm W—» Court r f Grow*# County, bring Can* Ho. 22 ,- 984 . Yog are required to WWW within {€) weeks, from tfa* date of th* first poblioation o f this notice, which is October find, IMS or judg­ ment way ho t*k«» against yon. CLYDE STARNER, 10-2-fit-ll-6) By Smith, MeCallisUr A Gibney, His Attorney*, LEGALNOTICE Court o f Common Pleas, Greene County, Ohio. Joseph H . Beisinger, Plaintiff .. -vs- Nora Alice Beijinger, Defendant Nora A lice Beisinger, No, whose last m m S M A S S S S L -o n ■ j a s a a e s a - L e s s o n ‘fm € k & $ m l i LOYALTY TO CHRIST LESSON t*XT—Mark 5:14-17; Joha «:•*- # O ^ ^ R l Wxi^W»iat tMere were Wto kt ate, ttore X cowitail Iocs fcf Christ— PhtSJppUM 3;T. Loyalty is undoubtedly one o f the finest traits o f mankind, Because o f it* strength, its fidelity to duty, etc,, shrewd men have learned to play upon man’a loyalty, making it serve ev il and, ignoble ends. Un­ worthy causes, having thus gained { the interest o f m as b y fair means I or foul, have demanded blind loyal*- ty. Even in the Carrying out of known place o f residence was 116 v , . .. . . , , , , . Rush Street,-Croyden,H otel, Apart- t*1*4 there M 80I^e k!nd of * cod crim e there has been the suggestion is some kind o f a coda '* “ 7 . r " " ! o i honor, a loyalty among thieves, ment 12U , Chicago, II)., will take n o -, ^ ^ p ot change the fact ties that on the 28th day o f Septem-j that there is a high and holy im - ber 1942, Joseph H. Beisinger file d , pidse ip man to stand, true to the his petition against her In Common; right; and in the Christian, to -be f C o u r t o f Groono C om *,, Ohio, w 2 S £ ' S d S fo r divorce On the ground o f gross J ^ Christ (our lesson of* last week) is rightly followed by loyalty to Him. I t mapifests itself in three ways. L Following Christ (Mark 2;14- :Without obedience there is^no;use talking about loyalty, When Jesus said: “ Fpllow^me,” Matthew (Levi) amee a irf fbBowbd. sHe was a. iin - and that unless, the said Nora Alice Beisipger shall answer s^id petition on o f before the 20,th day o f Novem­ ber 1942, judgment may be taken granting plaintiff a divorce. JOSEPH H. BEISINGER, (10 -2 -7 t-ll-9 ) Plaintiff Smith 'McCallister & Gibney, Attorneys fo r Plaintiff. FROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE CONSTITUTION OF OHIO PropMlns ta amend «*ctl»n 13 .of artlela IV eonttllutlen o f th*.'State, of 0M». relative to vaeaecieeln -Iddlcltl efflo* He it resolved by the General Assembly of the State of Ohio, three-flftha of- the mem­ bers elected to each bousetconc'urrtng there In, ■ That there life submitted to the electors. of the state, at the general election on the first. Tuesday after the first Monday. In November, 1942* a propoeal to amend section 13 0f: article IV «t the constitution of. the state of Ohio, to read as follows: . ahticdb rv Sec. X3. In -case the office, of in# Judge .shall become' vacant, before the, expiration of tHe regular term for-which-he-was elected, the; {vacancy shill be- filled/ by appointment by the governor, until a successor Is elected •nd -'hss .qualified; and such successor shall be.-elected for the ttn&plred term, at* the first general election fop the office' which is vacant tliat‘ occurs more ithan forty days after the vacancy shall .have occurred; ■provided, how ever, that, when the unexpiredr term ends ■within one ’ year immediately following the date of sUph general election,- an ejection to fill such tmexpired term .shall not' be held and the .appointment -shall he for such uuoxplred term. * BE I f FURTHER RESOLVED, That, at such election herein referred to the above proposal shall' be placed on the-'official ballot In- such, form as the-secretary of state may, prescribe; If fhe votes for the proposal, shall exceed those against it,, this* amendment a];all take effect, and oxlsflng Section 13 of article* IV of the constitution of the. Sate of Ohio shall be repealed and annulled. Adopted April' 29, 1841. ■ UNITED'STATES OF'AMERICA 1 - 1 : STATE OF OHIO OFFICE OF THE, SECRETARY OF. STATE 1, JOHN E. SWEENEY, Secretary of State of the State of Ohio, do hereby- certify that : the foregoing' la an .exemplified copy, carefully compared by me with ,the original .now on tile .in my office and'in my official custody as Secretary of State and fount! "to be true and correct, of a Joint Resolution adopted by the Ninety-fourth General Assembly of the State of Ohio, <on the 29th day of April, 1941, and ' 'filed In the office of the ■Secretary of State on the 8ih day of May, 1941, proposing to amend Article IV, Sectlnn.13, of tlie Constitu­ tion of the State of Ohio, rotaUve to vacancies in Judicial office. IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I hart here­ unto subscribed, my name and affixed my off! d a l seal at Columbus, Ohio,, this 3rd day of September, 1942. ' JOHN E. SWEENEY, , tStal) a : Secretary of State, NOTICE OP APPOINTMENT Estate o f Gene Thomas Andrews, deceased. Notice is hereby given that Walter P. Andrews has been duly appointed Administrator o f the estate o f Gene Thomas Andrews, deceased, late o f Cedarville Township, Greene County, Ohio. Dated this 11th day o f September, 1942. WILLIAM B. McCALLISTER, Judge o f the Probate Court, Greene County, Ohio, T LEGAL NOTICE Richard E . Bowles; whose last known place o f address was Hq. A Hq. Btry, 66th CA (AA ) A.P.O. No. 861, c-o Postmaster, New York City, New York, will take notice that on the 16th day o f September,- 1942, Frieda Bowles, a minor, b y her next friend, Harriet Massey, filed her cer­ tain action against him fo r divorce before the Common Pleas Court o f Grceiie CoUnty, Ohio, on the *grouilds o f gross neglect. That said Cause vtill come on fo r hearing before the Court on or after November 7th, 1942. Said cause being No. 22977 on the docket o f said.court. (9-18-GI-10-23) MARCUS SHOUP Attorney for Plaintiff LEGAL NOTICE Berry Davis, whose last known address Wffs 330 Cast St., Detroit, Michigan, ia hereby notified that Thelma H^tvis has filed a petition for divorce against him in the Common Pleas Court, Greene County, Ohio, the game being Case No. 22978 praying for * divorce on the grounds of gross neglect of duty and that said cause will be for hearing on or after Oct­ ober 24 , 1942 , (9.13.6H 0-28) DAN M. AULTMAN Attorney for Thelma Davis net (v. 17), a man o f the despiaed calling- o f .tax-gatherer, (v. 14), Shut he was ready for th e ca ll c Jesus. Notice, also that following Christ carries w ith i t the privilege andfOb- ligation (it Is both) o f making Him known'to our friends. MattKewldid not vWait until1-!he 'had* made a new .circle o f friends and then invite them 'to <a fea*t. He celebrated? his entrance .upon (he :npw* life of faith by a friendly and effective testimony before hjs frieridff who- were publi­ cans and -Sinners. . . Notice the words o f Jesus in vferse 17. It- iS n ot good .people, satisfied in their own self-righteousness, Who get to heaven. It is sinners, saved by grace,, who will 'th ere magnify tiie Saviour’s, name. H . Faithfabses* to Chrlst (John 6:66-69). . It is one thing to begin, but (|uite another to ^perhevere* in well dping, Jesus had been doing many m iracles and a-'host of followers had floicked •to Him. He had not otoly done great deeds, but bad ..sppken beautiful iWords ?About- the ^Fatherhood o f G od / the power ofr-the Holy Spirit, etc. He had fed the five thousand, and they liked that too. ' But- noW. He had talked about a broken b o d y / a b ou t' partaking of H isiflesh ;and -H is blood, and!they, ‘did hot lik e It. - This reached too deeply into the necessity fo r a per­ sonal spiritual experience,.and one that spoke of sacrifice, and majny of the disciples “ walked fid more? with him1” (v : 66). Hbw -perfect a picture of the "re ­ ligious experience” of multitudes of men and women in our day. < The true disciple, however, stands truest In just such an hour. "W e believe,” said Peter, and he spoke better than ever before in his life. "W e don't understand everything (that’s the thought back o f "T o Whom shall We g o ? " ),. but we be­ lieve, and jwe will stand fa st." Blessed word pf loyalty i Observe that Peter and his breth­ ren recognized Christ as the "H oly One of- God,” that Is, God’s Son in a unique and intimate sense, One -close to -and participating in the holiness o f God. Loyalty will not hold on any lCsier concept o f Ghtist. There is no incentive to real service and sacrifice in the watered-out re­ ligious faith o f the modernistic lib­ eral! IH , Forsaking All fer Christ (Ph il, 3 !7 -ll). ' There1were « number o f things in the life o f Paul as a natural than o f which he was justifiably proud, but which in the light o f his relation­ ship to Christ paled into insignifi­ cance. The best* this world can of­ fer looks like rubbish (v . 8)—which it really is—when one catches a gUnfpse o f JesuS CHrist. Turn your eyes upon J mu *. - Look full inHie wonderful face, And the -thing* o t earth will grew strangely dim la the light of HI* glory end grace. However, that experience ot Paul’s was only the beginning o f a life o f devotion to the L ofd , which is expressed in words the depth of which we cannot fuliy'plumb. What, does it mean to know "the poWer Of his resurrection, fend the fellowship o f his sufferings, being made oom- fortable unto his death"? 'W e do ribt fully know, but certain we are that it speak* o f a felloWship with Christ that is very deep and inti­ m ate; a life o f power, because He lives in end works through the be­ liever; A ihAring with Him o f the hatred and bitterness o f the world, yes, o f death, if need be, for Him, in the assurance Of resurrection. This it an "a ll out" Christian ex­ perience, nothing held back, nothing thought to be too difficult o r trying— everything gladly given in unstinted lovA and devotion to Christ. Now the Christian church is languishing for the want o f those who w ill for­ sake all to follow Him in complete faithfulness. - W ft iM M & b M k (Om tim tti f r m f n t p a p ) preo t i t d faod* and. ether products. O m Labor Day tits Fraaidngt again advised tiw Ceagraaa and the nation that something weeM have te h* do m to atop inflation, insisting that Con­ gress laclriata on farm prices only, whits he would ptwsonaTTy handle all matters affecting labor. Immediately there wee a<-remit among tips faw* group*, who beReved the Preridoat’s fa lla re to oonfcrol indaatrial wages -a* wen as his nsglsct in enforcing the one hundred and. ten per cent o f price ceiling on farm products, had actually bronght shout the danger o f inflation. They insisted that i f industrial wage* ware to be increased, with a conse­ quent increase in the cost o f farm labor, -processing and distributing farmprodacta, and in all o f the things the farmer has to buy, that farm prices Should not be reduced, but in­ stead-the farmer should be. guaran- fo r the food he raise*. The sad. thing about the whole sit­ uation is, had the o ffe r o f the farm group, a year,ago, been accepted, and .price, ceilings o f one hundred per cent o f - parity been- placed on farm pro­ ducts, while effective wage control provisions had been written into the original Price Control A ct, the-whole; controversy o f the past few weeks would have been unnecessary, and much o f -the' price inflation which has. taken place during the past year could have been avoided. Instead' the President land, his Administration' tolerated rising labor costs fo r many months, and then finally gave support? to a wage stabilisation formula which materially' increased labor costs, and greatly added t o ' the inflationary trend. It was only “natural fo r the farm interests to" resent the Presi­ dent’s attempt to place most o f' the -responsibility for -the inflationary spiral upon the farmers o f the coun­ try. - Peeling that the President has displayed a faVoritism’ fo r industrial labor and a prejudice against Agri­ culture, the farmers o f the nation insisted oh writing into the Anti- Inflation Law provision^ Yor their own protection. In the meantime it is the unorganized middle classes among our citizenship - the school teachers and. Other public servants, those retired on fixed incomes, the small business men and the white collar workers generally - that are -now paying the heaviest price for the Administration’s failure to accept proper legislation fo r price contrq^a year ago. IJRi44a N^TIPX Chari** Williamson, whoso plaeo o f roaidonos is unknown to tho plaintiff or Hor*MmMri«nd »J>d with roasonahla dflig saror manot ho ascertain*!, will taka notioo that on tho 30th day o f Boptomhar, 1942, Mildred Wfiliamaon, Minor, by bar n*xt friend, Edith Cline, filed her petition against Charles Wil­ liamson in the Court o f Common Pleas, Greene. Couafy, OMo, Case No. I B U Y MfftB STATU IHTM t ’ 1wP t r / t lt n ^If iff Our fighting most ar# dMAg their ahar*. Haro At heme aaa of me ineomereWet Heidi fer me »mt$ u Amerioa. ........ nil' ......................1........... WKIMtHH 3 , . , | pipe, Yalvoa and Fittings toe I ’trfttor, <!WA-xAd> mm, dfciad^AAd | Electric Pump# for All parfeeee, f Bolts. Pulleys, V Belt», Plu*»Mag f and Heating-SupiHos. 1 J. P. BOCKLETT SUPPLY CO. I XENIA,OH10 FARMS FOR SALE AND - FARM LOANS We have many good farms fo r sal# on easy terms. A lso make farm loans at 4 % interest fo r 16 years. N o application f«e and no appraia- a lfe e . Write or Inquire MoSavSney A Co. London O. Leon H. K ling, Mgr. <‘£M h NAME THAT STANDS FORGOOD BUDGET PLAN AVAILABLE Xenia,G. 2LfH 9,pra^sg for a dhcoroe, mmtody of children and relief on 1st* ground* of gross nagleet o f duty and ejctreme owmity, Said e#ua# wifi be far hoar- ing on and after six M l weeks from the date of tho firstjmNieation here- PHILLIP AULTMAM (KWMM 1 - 6 ) Attorney for Plaintiff; INVEST 10 PURCENTOFYOUB WJBXKLYPATINWARBONDS NightForeman for Mfil - Moulder operator tor seoond shift, machtoaman. WoodAssombliagForenwu, Corp«ito«, Mein, tonew—»toL krnr ope**$«*— toappKeantosolee- tod. Noago limit. No ona nowempieyedin Warwork con­ sidered. See Mr. Engle, The Buckeye Jncubetor Company, EuclidAvenue plant, Springfield, Ohio. JBpes Examined, Glasaes Fitted, Reasonable Charges. a D r . & E W M i OptooMtric Eye S p e t ir iU e . •- $ 4 * This lepest Apjdies to Buiil Residents Village Residents Can Phone WnL Maishall, Rhodes Rhenbert, or any Boy Scout. kmmmmm f o r W a r « What’* it good for?» ' 4,Gun», tanksfandmayb* part of aplana” ' In tha barnyards and gutties o ffarms and in the basements ecnddttics o f home* is it tot*of dtsn&whieh is doing>noigood where it is, butwhich isneeded at once to help smash the Japs and Nazis , .Scrap iron and steel, for example. '-Xvaa in poacetimo, scrap providod about 50%oftherawmaterialfor stecL It may' be rosty, old “scrap” to .you, but it ia actually rsfinod steel—with mast fenpnritief ramaved,; and < hul be quickly melted with new metal in the form of pig iron to produce highest quaHtysteel for ourwar machine*. Tha production o f sted-feMyftme up, up, UP, until today America I* tumingoutas much steelasall thereat » of the world combined. But ufttesa at -MAil;O ,000 j000 fidd ition h ireM .t> f«e^ i* unoovored promptly, the full rateofproductioncannot benttained orinemased; thaneccs—ryt*nk»,guns andshipscannotbeproduced. TherubberaHuationisalsocritical. InapHe of thevrecent rubber-drive, thenrjto a continuing,need foplarge quantitiesof uptp rubber.Alsoforother wastemateriafeandmetalslikebrass, copper, tine, bwdandtin. TheJunkwhichyoueafiiOtiAbought ..byinduitryfiropascrapdealersatestob* lished, govenwaimt-controlledprices. Willyouhrip? First—collectallofyourwaste ma­ terialandpileitup. Then—sellft to a junkdealer, give it ton.aharity, takeit youiMf to the swsaesfcaolecitiqnpoint,orgetintends wWAfyonrlcicsaSalvageCommittee. If you livnon AfacA^AtoMittit your *Coufify Wte 8aard ortpre* lir n»i»q>le^ ment deAler. n t r n ' i a m e c n p M e t k e i m i In g fVMWCipp O ppiiT flV By MW V fVmVRrWWRnwV VAAR PRODUCT ION kOARD ’ffWgr gWBv^nr#wNFWP2Fwff NfW IWRB<WHNPrHWHP* WWH WaBWNBBPIUnPw' kAA^JL' espevtii^JLAiJI JhtF 'gwMkg—us eul ^ genBnBw INjf INN i a n i i i i c i m a a g v m s — i T T g E JUNK MAKES FIGHYING WEAPONS On#olddl«c Will fNfOVId* •ct*p attcl tiredadfof210 .stmt-auto­ matic litht tw6fcwi$ dm old plow wia h*k> tmUrn huudmd 71-aMa. anaM> piWtiogFrctoctiM*. OocuNleMold J V t t tbSprovtdMM V 9 V V rauch rubbw JE J s -m f’ Y W f 0—aMtbomiwHMp aMteSlumdcmmMW, M S T E R M L S H E K M O ' VUNI nMYASS RM w MIHK h A|a|iu k k itft -HW1PIP nppPf -W atte Ckkldhig FHai*«-'Wh*a ym c*t a p—*d remere,wmiajailsAreretlareaami ..rettoy—i mm dreW. - mmmmm iwRitiAtijyjisiirertMhif^~H^iga’Amwiiki^iMhAll finifiiiid ^ M i r e - ( r e b . MATM Ittili (retJreto^titrereire*i*'-'ti»re. Ft 15 : .1; » n Aec( tw o V been the pe bAYaoni/ now, • lower ing si progre Comm been 1 , labor 'a wari is take . ty daj power * shorta fering effort, i mittee lation farme draft, prever. be exp are p> almost ing o doned, fo r mt that a turity, labor rent 1 quittii except .and ai War £ Ing n o, than t The v <• first" <f - chang cans. - will li they -• as co Alrea Are-begi) u , in many .it difficu lt to which Amei . accustoi 1. o f metal i from •and A s th • and' g > as will other oline natioi have and & oil and tions l'O ■ ill and < .«'s real >• can i many M a... ents, depen milita weekt those « ‘ li faceh.iiucti How« “ graj as he as hi. • many tary to re. i huge sea s. ed an . front that Arne; takin oiviii needi Open train ' 1 as el Ing i in wl has has 1 noun' the l boar 1 legis is a b o h A lo 7 the t tion the 4 T1 had ness < Ing ther hum I Ante - | trfat- ■

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